Site Navigation

Tempesst

18:00 - 18:20

Friday 9 November

South Bandstand In Association with Sentric Powered By Yamaha

If travel broadens the mind, then it’s little wonder London-based five-piece Tempesst have such a wild, freewheeling approach. Colour-laden, chemical-drenched psych-pop with folk overtones, the band’s wild sound and sweet melodies are a rejection of the mundane, continually grasping towards the universal.

Lead singer Toma Banjanin and drumming brother Andy grew up in the tiny Australian town of Noosa, as picturesque as it was conservative. “It was this small town where for better or so worse you weren’t really exposed to anything else outside of what is socially projected upon you,” he recalls. “I suppose its easy to embrace an exploratory energy when you’re from a small town.”

Travelling across the United States and ending up in London, the duo formed Tempesst – alongside guitarist Eric Weber, and fellow Australian exiles Blake Misipeka (bass), and Kane Reynolds (keys) – as an outlet for their thoughts and experiences, the emotions that travel can conjure. “Every year we try to get around and expose ourselves to different people, different cities, different countries,” he says. “I would definitely say travel is a massive part of our sound. As an artist you’re always trying to find different things to inspire you.”

Debut EP ‘Adult Wonderland’ was certainly inspired. Released on their own label, the devoutly independent project draws on almost three year’s worth of material, a time when the five-piece were searching for each other, and for a certain sound. A glorious, inspired, sunshine mesh, the material on the four-track release owed a debt to that classic West Coast lineage – Crosby, Stills & Nash for example – alongside more modern wayfarers such as Damien Jurado.

The band want to release each EP on their own label, and record the material at their studio space in East London, one that will serve as a base for their ever-expanding ambitions. “We’re in the process of doing that now,” he states. “It’s a cool little complex. We’ve got two rooms that we’re keeping for ourselves to write and record in. We want to write and record an album per year, and keep releasing as much music as we possibly can.”